![]() ![]() You MUST curate your library.Īpple TV will play h265 4K content that you may find online. But you aren't going to be able to just dump whatever media you want into iTunes and it just work. So it's not an issue for me and I'm used to it. I have a collection of about 1400 movies on a iTunes server and have a pretty good work flow for ripping movies or sourcing online. I use Subler on a Mac to do this since it's specifically designed to do this job, not sure what a Windows equivalent would be. If you get movies from online sources than you will need to repackage the video from AVI to M4V. If you rip your own movies, you will want to use Handbrake. ![]() Videos must be in MP4 format with either AAC stereo or Dolby Digital (or both). The interface is sooo smooth and responsive.īut if you aren't willing to use the ecosystem (like having an iTunes server) then you might not find it that enjoyable. Can airplay easily (like if you want to show someone a picture or YouTube video). Phones automatically trigger search boxes when you go to search. The issue here seems imho not to be with the connections/setup, but with local file content, its audio format – and BD origin.Apple TV is great if you have an Apple Ecosystem. Or a real AV receiver that has Atmos capability. Because of bandwidth requirements, users will indeed need audio passthrough from a TV with eARC, or a separate connection via HDMI Audio Extractor with double HDMI 2.x out (e.g. ![]() This is why audio systems may not know a difference between the two (unless from meta data communication). Devices that support Dolby TrueHD will also need to output in Dolby MAT (including Blu-ray set-top boxes), as part of HDMI conformity. Dolby MAT is different from Dolby TrueHD. Set up Dolby Atmos or surround sound on Apple TV with a sound bar or AV receiver - Apple SupportĪpple TV 4K outputs Dolby Atmos (DD+ formatted) into Dolby MAT format, uncompressed like PCM. ![]() this is the Apple support link for Atmos audio hookup to an ATV Apple’s own support site, states “Apple TV 4K uses a high bandwidth form of Dolby Atmos that doesn’t work over ARC connections.” Sonos soundbars have only 1 HDMI port, they do not support full HDMI in with a second HDMI port that can be connected directly to an ATV So when the ATV outputs Dolby Video content, if that is not support by the passthrough, you will get only basic non HDR video to the TV. it gets even more complicated than Apple lets on, because while a soundbar / receiver may have passthrough ability, that does not mean it will pass through all forms of video content, e.g. Apple’s “solution” to this Apple created problem, is to require you to use a soundbar or HDMI receiver with at least two HDMI ports, one of which most be a full eARC HDMI input port to connect the ATV, and the other HDMI port connected to the TV set this is why when playing Atmos content from native apps in the TV set, the Sonos App will show “Dolby Atmos” any TV set with ARC, using its own native streaming apps, will properly pass on internal ADD+ via its ARC port to the Sonos this is why you see on the Sonos App, that the soundbar is playing DD 5.1 when playing Atmos content from the ATV because the ATV will not output Atmos DD plus (ADD+), if you have an ARC (not eARC) TV set, the ATV drops the best output option down to PCM stereo. yes you read that correctly - the ATV which internally apparently uses ADD+, only supports ADDTHD output, it is not capable of outputting ADD+ ! (See Apple Support link at the bottom of my post) ironically the ATV, despite what it handles internally, will output only DD Atmos True HD (ADDTHD) which requires at least a TV with an eARC HDMI, to pass TRUE HD content to the Sonos If you have an ARC TV set, the fault is a truly bizzare twist in ATV Atmos output restrictions I just went through this, with lots of tech support and research. the OP’s original question, asking about Atmos compatibility with a Sonos Arc sound bar. The statements made in this answer may be true, but they are misleading w.r.t. ![]()
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